At Home

This morning, early, I wakened 
to a knocking at the pane—an apple bough, 
fruit-laden, stirred by wind—
and rose to the morning’s clear gift. 
Outdoors in sunlight, bending 
to the kind of labor that gives back 
more than it costs, I mowed the grass 
and planted a sycamore that with luck 
will rise above most things, outlast 
all else I’ve set my hands to do. 
Working this day to the nub, my own way, 
I hoed the garden of its weeds, 
the fragile order of an intention 
added to what nature had to offer. 
I took it. It was mine, though more 
than most have reason to expect.

And now it is evening, late summer again, 
light golden on the fields, a dark seam 
of cloud above the mountain’s spine. 
The sky does indeed resemble a dome. 
From the hill behind the house 
where my walk has brought me, outcroppings 
of stone on the slope below glow white 
against the pasture’s bottomless green, 
outcroppings as we are of memory, 
the daily bread of insult and affection. 
Even here, away from others, an echo 
of the evening news persists in mind, 
some old tale of bad things that happen 
to some who do, most who don’t 
deserve them. And I give back to the air 
that holds its peace an old question: 
how to be in good fortune on a rare day 
in late summer, just before fall begins.

Eric Trethewey

Next
YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE

Restoring the Chaplain Corps’ Moral Backbone

Miles Smith

Secretary of War Pete Hegseth announced that he is revamping the U.S. military’s chaplain corps as part…

Just Stop It

Liel Leibovitz

Earlier this summer, Egypt’s Ministry of Religious Endowments launched a new campaign. It is entitled “Correct Your…

Kathy Hochul, Champion of the Culture of Death

Brian A. Graebe

Yesterday, New York Governor Kathy Hochul announced her intention to sign the Medical Aid in Dying Act,…